13 One of the important aspects of DragonFly is system configuration. Correct system configuration will help prevent headaches during future upgrades. This chapter will explain much of the DragonFly configuration process, including some of the parameters which can be set to tune a DragonFly system.

57 When laying out file systems with [disklabel(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=disklabel&section=8) remember that hard drives transfer data faster from the outer tracks to the inner. Thus smaller and heavier-accessed file systems should be closer to the outside of the drive, while larger partitions like `/usr` should be placed toward the inner. It is a good idea to create partitions in a similar order to: root, swap, `/var`, `/usr`.

58 <!-- XXX: on the advent of SSDs, do we really need to talk about this stuff? Who knows where on the platter the partitions land, considering that a hard disk has multiple platters? -->

62 The size of `/var` reflects the intended machine usage. `/var` is used to hold mailboxes, log files, and printer spools. Mailboxes and log files can grow to unexpected sizes depending on how many users exist and how long log files are kept. Most users would never require a gigabyte, but remember that `/var/tmp` must be large enough to contain packages.

66 The `/usr` partition holds much of the files required to support the system, the pkgsrc® collection (recommended) and the source code (optional). At least 2 gigabytes would be recommended for this partition.

78 As a rule of thumb, the swap partition should be about double the size of system memory (RAM). For example, if the machine has 128 megabytes of memory, the swap file should be 256 megabytes. Systems with less memory may perform better with more swap. Less than 256 megabytes of swap is not recommended and memory expansion should be considered. The kernel's VM paging algorithms are tuned to perform best when the swap partition is at least two times the size of main memory. Configuring too little swap can lead to inefficiencies in the VM page scanning code and might create issues later if more memory is added.

79 <!-- XXX: do we really recommend double the RAM for swap? IMHO the amount of RAM should be more than enough -->

82 On larger systems with multiple SCSI disks (or multiple IDE disks operating on different controllers), it is recommend that a swap is configured on each drive (up to four drives). The swap partitions should be approximately the same size. The kernel can handle arbitrary sizes but internal data structures scale to 4 times the largest swap partition. Keeping the swap partitions near the same size will allow the kernel to optimally stripe swap space across disks. Large swap sizes are fine, even if swap is not used much. It might be easier to recover from a runaway program before being forced to reboot.

90 Several users think a single large partition will be fine, but there are several reasons why this is a bad idea. First, each partition has different operational characteristics and separating them allows the file system to tune accordingly. For example, the root and `/usr` partitions are read-mostly, without much writing. While a lot of reading and writing could occur in `/var` and `/var/tmp`.

92 By properly partitioning a system, fragmentation introduced in the smaller write heavy partitions will not bleed over into the mostly-read partitions. Keeping the write-loaded partitions closer to the disk's edge, will increase I/O performance in the partitions where it occurs the most. Now while I/O performance in the larger partitions may be needed, shifting them more toward the edge of the disk will not lead to a significant performance improvement over moving `/var` to the edge. Finally, there are safety concerns. A smaller, neater root partition which is mostly read-only has a greater chance of surviving a bad crash.

109 The principal location for system configuration information is within `/etc/rc.conf`. This file contains a wide range of configuration information, principally used at system startup to configure the system. Its name directly implies this; it is configuration information for the `rc*` files.

113 An administrator should make entries in the `rc.conf` file to override the default settings from `/etc/defaults/rc.conf`. The defaults file should not be copied verbatim to `/etc` - it contains default values, not examples. All system-specific changes should be made in the `rc.conf` file itself.

117 A number of strategies may be applied in clustered applications to separate site-wide configuration from system-specific configuration in order to keep administration overhead down. The recommended approach is to place site-wide configuration into another file, such as `/etc/rc.conf.site`, and then include this file into `/etc/rc.conf`, which will contain only system-specific information.

164 Typically, installed applications have their own configuration files, with their own syntax, etc. It is important that these files be kept separate from the base system, so that they may be easily located and managed by the package management tools.

172 Normally, when a port or package is installed, sample configuration files are also installed. These are usually identified with a `.default` suffix. If there are no existing configuration files for the application, they will be created by copying the `.default` files.

209 Software installed from a port or the packages collection will often place a script in `/usr/pkg/share/examples/rc.d` which is invoked at system startup with a `start` argument, and at system shutdown with a `stop` argument. This is the recommended way for starting system-wide services that are to be run as `root`, or that expect to be started as `root`. These scripts are registered as part of the installation of the package, and will be removed when the package is removed.

260 The startup scripts of DragonFly will look in `/usr/pkg/share/examples/rc.d` for scripts that have an `.sh` extension and are executable by `root`. Those scripts that are found are called with an option `start` at startup, and `stop` at shutdown to allow them to carry out their purpose. So if you wanted the above sample script to be picked up and run at the proper time during system startup, you should save it to a file called `FooBar.sh` in `/usr/local/etc/rc.d` and make sure it is executable. You can make a shell script executable with [chmod(1)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=chmod&section=1) as shown below:

272 Some services expect to be invoked by [inetd(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=inetd&section=8) when a connection is received on a suitable port. This is common for mail reader servers (POP and IMAP, etc.). These services are enabled by editing the file `/etc/inetd.conf`. See [inetd(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=inetd&section=8) for details on editing this file.

276 Some additional system services may not be covered by the toggles in `/etc/rc.conf`. These are traditionally enabled by placing the command(s) to invoke them in `/etc/rc.local` (which does not exist by default). Note that `rc.local` is generally regarded as the location of last resort; if there is a better place to start a service, do it there.

284 It is also possible to use the [cron(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=cron&section=8) daemon to start system services. This approach has a number of advantages, not least being that because [cron(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=cron&section=8) runs these processes as the owner of the `crontab`, services may be started and maintained by non-`root` users.

288 This takes advantage of a feature of [cron(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=cron&section=8): the time specification may be replaced by `@reboot`, which will cause the job to be run when [cron(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=cron&section=8) is started shortly after system boot.

315 One of the most useful utilities in DragonFly is [cron(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=cron&section=8). The `cron` utility runs in the background and constantly checks the `/etc/crontab` file. The `cron` utility also checks the `/var/cron/tabs` directory, in search of new `crontab` files. These `crontab` files store information about specific functions which `cron` is supposed to perform at certain times.

319 The `cron` utility uses two different types of configuration files, the system crontab and user crontabs. The only difference between these two formats is the sixth field. In the system crontab, the sixth field is the name of a user for the command to run as. This gives the system crontab the ability to run commands as any user. In a user crontab, the sixth field is the command to run, and all commands run as the user who created the crontab; this is an important security feature.

327 The `root` user can have a user crontab just like any other user. This one is different from `/etc/crontab` (the system crontab). Because of the system crontab, there's usually no need to create a user crontab for `root`.

368 1. Like most DragonFly configuration files, the `#` character represents a comment. A comment can be placed in the file as a reminder of what and why a desired action is performed. Comments cannot be on the same line as a command or else they will be interpreted as part of the command; they must be on a new line. Blank lines are ignored.

372 1. First, the environment must be defined. The equals (`=`) character is used to define any environment settings, as with this example where it is used for the `SHELL`, `PATH`, and `HOME` options. If the shell line is omitted, `cron` will use the default, which is `sh`. If the `PATH` variable is omitted, no default will be used and file locations will need to be absolute. If `HOME` is omitted, `cron` will use the invoking users home directory.

376 1. This line defines a total of seven fields. Listed here are the values `minute`, `hour`, `mday`, `month`, `wday`, `who`, and `command`. These are almost all self explanatory. `minute` is the time in minutes the command will be run. `hour` is similar to the `minute` option, just in hours. `mday` stands for day of the month. `month` is similar to `hour` and `minute`, as it designates the month. The `wday` option stands for day of the week. All these fields must be numeric values, and follow the twenty-four hour clock. The `who` field is special, and only exists in the `/etc/crontab` file. This field specifies which user the command should be run as. When a user installs his or her `crontab` file, they will not have this option. Finally, the `command` option is listed. This is the last field, so naturally it should designate the command to be executed.

380 1. This last line will define the values discussed above. Notice here we have a `*/5` listing, followed by several more `*` characters. These `*` characters mean ***first-last***, and can be interpreted as ***every*** time. So, judging by this line, it is apparent that the `atrun` command is to be invoked by `root` every five minutes regardless of what day or month it is. For more information on the `atrun` command, see the [atrun(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=atrun&section=8) manual page.Commands can have any number of flags passed to them; however, commands which extend to multiple lines need to be broken with the backslash ***\*** continuation character.

384 This is the basic set up for every `crontab` file, although there is one thing different about this one. Field number six, where we specified the username, only exists in the system `/etc/crontab` file. This field should be omitted for individual user `crontab` files.

392 **Important:** You must not use the procedure described here to edit/install the system crontab. Simply use your favorite editor: the `cron` utility will notice that the file has changed and immediately begin using the updated version. If you use `crontab` to load the `/etc/crontab` file you may get an error like `root: not found` because of the system crontab's additional user field.

416 For users who wish to begin their own crontab file from scratch, without the use of a template, the `crontab -e` option is available. This will invoke the selected editor with an empty file. When the file is saved, it will be automatically installed by the `crontab` command.

437 DragonFly uses the NetBSD® `rc.d` system for system initialization. Users should notice the files listed in the `/etc/rc.d` directory. Many of these files are for basic services which can be controlled with the `start`, `stop`, and `restart` options. For instance, [sshd(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sshd&section=8&manpath=OpenBSD+3.3) can be restarted with the following command:

449 This procedure is similar for other services. Of course, services are usually started automatically as specified in [rc.conf(5)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rc.conf&section=5). For example, enabling the Network Address Translation daemon at startup is as simple as adding the following line to `/etc/rc.conf`:

456 If a `natd_enable="NO"` line is already present, then simply change the `NO` to `YES`. The rc scripts will automatically load any other dependent services during the next reboot, as described below.

464 Since the `rc.d` system is primarily intended to start/stop services at system startup/shutdown time, the standard `start`, `stop` and `restart` options will only perform their action if the appropriate `/etc/rc.conf` variables are set. For instance the above `sshd restart` command will only work if `sshd_enable` is set to `YES` in `/etc/rc.conf`. To `start`, `stop` or `restart` a service regardless of the settings in `/etc/rc.conf`, the commands should be prefixed with ***force***. For instance to restart `sshd` regardless of the current `/etc/rc.conf` setting, execute the following command:

476 It is easy to check if a service is enabled in `/etc/rc.conf` by running the appropriate `rc.d` script with the option `rcvar`. Thus, an administrator can check that `sshd` is in fact enabled in `/etc/rc.conf` by running:

510 It is also possible to `reload` a service. This will attempt to send a signal to an individual service, forcing the service to reload its configuration files. In most cases this means sending the service a `SIGHUP` signal.

518 Many system services depend on other services to function properly. For example, NIS and other RPC-based services may fail to start until after the `rpcbind` (portmapper) service has started. To resolve this issue, information about dependencies and other meta-data is included in the comments at the top of each startup script. The [rcorder(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rcorder&section=8) program is then used to parse these comments during system initialization to determine the order in which system services should be invoked to satisfy the dependencies. The following words may be included at the top of each startup file:

532 * KEYWORD: When [rcorder(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rcorder&section=8) uses the `-k` option, then only the rc.d files matching this keyword are used. [(1)](#FTN.AEN4751) For example, when using `-k shutdown`, only the `rc.d` scripts defining the `shutdown` keyword are used.

534 With the `-s` option, [rcorder(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rcorder&section=8) will skip any `rc.d` script defining the corresponding keyword to skip. For example, scripts defining the `nostart` keyword are skipped at boot time.

542 Additional information about the DragonFly `rc.d` system can be found in the [rc(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rc&section=8), [rc.conf(5)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rc.conf&section=5), and [rc.subr(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rc.subr&section=8) manual pages.

546 Besides the methods described above DragonFly supports [rcrun(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rcrun&section=8) to control rc(8) scripts. [rcrun(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rcrun&section=8) provides a number of command for controlling rc(8)

658 Before you begin, you should know the model of the card you have, the chip it uses, and whether it is a PCI or ISA card. DragonFly supports a wide variety of both PCI and ISA cards. Check the Hardware Compatibility List for your release to see if your card is supported.

662 Once you are sure your card is supported, you need to determine the proper driver for the card. The file `/usr/src/sys/i386/conf/LINT` will give you the list of network interfaces drivers with some information about the supported chipsets/cards. If you have doubts about which driver is the correct one, read the manual page of the driver. The manual page will give you more information about the supported hardware and even the possible problems that could occur.

666 If you own a common card, most of the time you will not have to look very hard for a driver. Drivers for common network cards are present in the `GENERIC` kernel, so your card should show up during boot, like so:

704 To use your network card, you will need to load the proper driver. This may be accomplished in one of two ways. The easiest way is to simply load a kernel module for your network card with [kldload(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=kldload&section=8). A module is not available for all network card drivers (ISA cards and cards using the [ed(4)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=ed&section=4) driver, for example). Alternatively, you may statically compile the support for your card into your kernel. Check `/usr/src/sys/i386/conf/LINT` and the manual page of the driver to know what to add in your kernel configuration file. For more information about recompiling your kernel, please see [kernelconfig.html Chapter 9]. If your card was detected at boot by your kernel (`GENERIC`) you do not have to build a new kernel.

781 DragonFly uses the driver name followed by the order in which one the card is detected at the kernel boot to name the network card, starting the count at zero. For example, `sis2` would be the third network card on the system using the [sis(4)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sis&section=4) driver.

799 1. The physical media selection is on autoselection mode (`media: Ethernet autoselect (100baseTX <full-duplex>)`). We see that `dc1` was configured to run with `10baseT/UTP` media. For more information on available media types for a driver, please refer to its manual page.

823 To configure your card, you need `root` privileges. The network card configuration can be done from the command line with [ifconfig(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=ifconfig&section=8) as root.

853 You have to replace `dc0`, `dc1`, and so on, with the correct device for your cards, and the addresses with the proper ones. You should read the card driver and [ifconfig(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command#ifconfig&section8) manual pages for more details about the allowed options and also [rc.conf(5)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=rc.conf&section=5) manual page for more information on the syntax of `/etc/rc.conf`.

861 You will also have to edit the file `/etc/hosts` to add the names and the IP addresses of various machines of the LAN, if they are not already there. For more information please refer to [hosts(5)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=hosts&section=5) and to `/usr/share/examples/etc/hosts`.

869 Once you have made the necessary changes in `/etc/rc.conf`, you should reboot your system. This will allow the change(s) to the interface(s) to be applied, and verify that the system restarts without any configuration errors.

957 Troubleshooting hardware and software configurations is always a pain, and a pain which can be alleviated by checking the simple things first. Is your network cable plugged in? Have you properly configured the network services? Did you configure the firewall correctly? Is the card you are using supported by DragonFly? Always check the hardware notes before sending off a bug report. Update your version of DragonFly to the latest PREVIEW version. Check the mailing list archives, or perhaps search the Internet.

961 If the card works, yet performance is poor, it would be worthwhile to read over the [tuning(7)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=tuning&section=7) manual page. You can also check the network configuration as incorrect network settings can cause slow connections.

965 Some users experience one or two ***device timeouts***, which is normal for some cards. If they continue, or are bothersome, you may wish to be sure the device is not conflicting with another device. Double check the cable connections. Perhaps you may just need to get another card.

969 At times, users see a few ***`watchdog timeout`*** errors. The first thing to do here is to check your network cable. Many cards require a PCI slot which supports Bus Mastering. On some old motherboards, only one PCI slot allows it (usually slot 0). Check the network card and the motherboard documentation to determine if that may be the problem.

973 ***`No route to host`*** messages occur if the system is unable to route a packet to the destination host. This can happen if no default route is specified, or if a cable is unplugged. Check the output of `netstat -rn` and make sure there is a valid route to the host you are trying to reach. If there is not, read on to [advanced-networking.html Chapter 19].

977 ***`ping: sendto: Permission denied`*** error messages are often caused by a misconfigured firewall. If `ipfw` is enabled in the kernel but no rules have been defined, then the default policy is to deny all traffic, even ping requests! Read on to [firewalls.html Section 10.7] for more information.

981 Sometimes performance of the card is poor, or below average. In these cases it is best to set the media selection mode from `autoselect` to the correct media selection. While this usually works for most hardware, it may not resolve this issue for everyone. Again, check all the network settings, and read over the [tuning(7)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=tuning&section=7) manual page.

1019 The calculation of alias netmasks is important, but fortunately quite simple. For a given interface, there must be one address which correctly represents the network's netmask. Any other addresses which fall within this network must have a netmask of all `1`s (expressed as either `255.255.255.255` or `0xffffffff`).

1023 For example, consider the case where the `fxp0` interface is connected to two networks, the `10.1.1.0` network with a netmask of `255.255.255.0` and the `202.0.75.16` network with a netmask of `255.255.255.240`. We want the system to appear at `10.1.1.1` through `10.1.1.5` and at `202.0.75.17` through `202.0.75.20`. As noted above, only the first address in a given network range (in this case, `10.0.1.1` and `202.0.75.17`) should have a real netmask; all the rest (`10.1.1.2` through `10.1.1.5` and `202.0.75.18` through `202.0.75.20`) must be configured with a netmask of `255.255.255.255`.

1131 `/etc/hosts` is a simple text database reminiscent of the old Internet. It works in conjunction with DNS and NIS providing name to IP address mappings. Local computers connected via a LAN can be placed in here for simplistic naming purposes instead of setting up a [named(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=named&section=8) server. Additionally, `/etc/hosts` can be used to provide a local record of Internet names, reducing the need to query externally for commonly accessed names.

1225 `syslog.conf` is the configuration file for the [syslogd(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=syslogd&section=8) program. It indicates which types of `syslog` messages are logged to particular log files.

1307 `newsyslog.conf` is the configuration file for [newsyslog(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=newsyslog&section=8), a program that is normally scheduled to run by [cron(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=cron&section=8). [newsyslog(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=newsyslog&section=8) determines when log files require archiving or rearranging. `logfile` is moved to `logfile.0`, `logfile.0` is moved to `logfile.1`, and so on. Alternatively, the log files may be archived in [gzip(1)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=gzip&section=1) format causing them to be named: `logfile.0.gz`, `logfile.1.gz`, and so on.

1311 `newsyslog.conf` indicates which log files are to be managed, how many are to be kept, and when they are to be touched. Log files can be rearranged and/or archived when they have either reached a certain size, or at a certain periodic time/date.

1365 `sysctl.conf` looks much like `rc.conf`. Values are set in a `variable=value` form. The specified values are set after the system goes into multi-user mode. Not all variables are settable in this mode.

1393 [sysctl(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sysctl&section=8) is an interface that allows you to make changes to a running DragonFly system. This includes many advanced options of the TCP/IP stack and virtual memory system that can dramatically improve performance for an experienced system administrator. Over five hundred system variables can be read and set using [sysctl(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sysctl&section=8).

1445 If you want to set automatically some variables each time the machine boots, add them to the `/etc/sysctl.conf` file. For more information see the [sysctl.conf(5)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sysctl.conf&section=5) manual page and the [configtuning-configfiles.html#CONFIGTUNING-SYSCTLCONF Section 6.10.4].

1457 In some cases it may be desirable to modify read-only [sysctl(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sysctl&section=8) values. While this is not recommended, it is also sometimes unavoidable.

1461 For instance on some laptop models the [cardbus(4)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=cardbus&section=4) device will not probe memory ranges, and fail with errors which look similar to:

1475 Cases like the one above usually require the modification of some default [sysctl(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sysctl&section=8) settings which are set read only. To overcome these situations a user can put [sysctl(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sysctl&section=8) ***OIDs*** in their local `/boot/loader.conf`. Default settings are located in the `/boot/defaults/loader.conf` file.

1479 Fixing the problem mentioned above would require a user to set `hw.pci.allow_unsupported_io_range=1` in the aforementioned file. Now [cardbus(4)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=cardbus&section=4) will work properly.

1501 The `vfs.vmiodirenable` sysctl variable may be set to either 0 (off) or 1 (on); it is 1 by default. This variable controls how directories are cached by the system. Most directories are small, using just a single fragment (typically 1 K) in the file system and less (typically 512 bytes) in the buffer cache. With this variable turned off (to 0), the buffer cache will only cache a fixed number of directories even if ou have a huge amount of memory. When turned on (to 1), this sysctl allows the buffer cache to use the VM Page Cache to cache the directories, making all the memory available for caching directories. However, the minimum in-core memory used to cache a directory is the physical page size (typically 4 K) rather than 512 bytes. We recommend keeping this option on if you are running any services which manipulate large numbers of files. Such services can include web caches, large mail systems, and news systems. Keeping this option on will generally not reduce performance even with the wasted memory but you should experiment to find out.

1509 The `vfs.write_behind` sysctl variable defaults to `1` (on). This tells the file system to issue media writes as full clusters are collected, which typically occurs when writing large sequential files. The idea is to avoid saturating the buffer cache with dirty buffers when it would not benefit I/O performance. However, this may stall processes and under certain circumstances you may wish to turn it off.

1517 The `vfs.hirunningspace` sysctl variable determines how much outstanding write I/O may be queued to disk controllers system-wide at any given instance. The default is usually sufficient but on machines with lots of disks you may want to bump it up to four or five ***megabytes***. Note that setting too high a value (exceeding the buffer cache's write threshold) can lead to extremely bad clustering performance. Do not set this value arbitrarily high! Higher write values may add latency to reads occurring at the same time.

1529 The `vm.swap_idle_enabled` sysctl variable is useful in large multi-user systems where you have lots of users entering and leaving the system and lots of idle processes. Such systems tend to generate a great deal of continuous pressure on free memory reserves. Turning this feature on and tweaking the swapout hysteresis (in idle seconds) via `vm.swap_idle_threshold1` and `vm.swap_idle_threshold2` allows you to depress the priority of memory pages associated with idle processes more quickly then the normal pageout algorithm. This gives a helping hand to the pageout daemon. Do not turn this option on unless you need it, because the tradeoff you are making is essentially pre-page memory sooner rather than later; thus eating more swap and disk bandwidth. In a small system this option will have a determinable effect but in a large system that is already doing moderate paging this option allows the VM system to stage whole processes into and out of memory easily.

1537 IDE drives lie about when a write completes. With IDE write caching turned on, IDE hard drives not only write data to disk out of order, but will sometimes delay writing some blocks indefinitely when under heavy disk loads. A crash or power failure may cause serious file system corruption. Turning off write caching will remove the danger of this data loss, but will also cause disk operations to proceed ***very slowly.*** Change this only if prepared to suffer with the disk slowdown.

1555 The [tunefs(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=tunefs&section=8) program can be used to fine-tune a UFS file system. This program has many different options, but for now we are only concerned with toggling Soft Updates on and off, which is done by:

1569 A filesystem cannot be modified with [tunefs(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=tunefs&section=8) while it is mounted. A good time to enable Soft Updates is before any partitions have been mounted, in single-user mode.

1577 Soft Updates drastically improves meta-data performance, mainly file creation and deletion, through the use of a memory cache. We recommend to use Soft Updates on all of your file systems. There are two downsides to Soft Updates that you should be aware of: First, Soft Updates guarantees filesystem consistency in the case of a crash but could very easily be several seconds (even a minute!) behind updating the physical disk. If your system crashes you may lose more work than otherwise. Secondly, Soft Updates delays the freeing of filesystem blocks. If you have a filesystem (such as the root filesystem) which is almost full, performing a major update, such as `make installworld`, can cause the filesystem to run out of space and the update to fail.

1589 Historically, the default behavior was to write out meta-data updates synchronously. If a directory had been changed, the system waited until the change was actually written to disk. The file data buffers (file contents) were passed through the buffer cache and backed up to disk later on asynchronously. The advantage of this implementation is that it operates safely. If there is a failure during an update, the meta-data are always in a consistent state. A file is either created completely or not at all. If the data blocks of a file did not find their way out of the buffer cache onto the disk by the time of the crash, [fsck(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command#fsck&section8) is able to recognize this and repair the filesystem by setting the file length to 0. Additionally, the implementation is clear and simple. The disadvantage is that meta-data changes are slow. An `rm -r`, for instance, touches all the files in a directory sequentially, but each directory change (deletion of a file) will be written synchronously to the disk. This includes updates to the directory itself, to the inode table, and possibly to indirect blocks allocated by the file. Similar considerations apply for unrolling large hierarchies (`tar -x`).

1593 The second case is asynchronous meta-data updates. This is the default for Linux/ext2fs and `mount -o async` for *BSD ufs. All meta-data updates are simply being passed through the buffer cache too, that is, they will be intermixed with the updates of the file content data. The advantage of this implementation is there is no need to wait until each meta-data update has been written to disk, so all operations which cause huge amounts of meta-data updates work much faster than in the synchronous case. Also, the implementation is still clear and simple, so there is a low risk for bugs creeping into the code. The disadvantage is that there is no guarantee at all for a consistent state of the filesystem. If there is a failure during an operation that updated large amounts of meta-data (like a power failure, or someone pressing the reset button), the filesystem will be left in an unpredictable state. There is no opportunity to examine the state of the filesystem when the system comes up again; the data blocks of a file could already have been written to the disk while the updates of the inode table or the associated directory were not. It is actually impossible to implement a `fsck` which is able to clean up the resulting chaos (because the necessary information is not available on the disk). If the filesystem has been damaged beyond repair, the only choice is to use [newfs(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command#newfs&section8) on it and restore it from backup.

1597 The usual solution for this problem was to implement ***dirty region logging***, which is also referred to as ***journaling***, although that term is not used consistently and is occasionally applied to other forms of transaction logging as well. Meta-data updates are still written synchronously, but only into a small region of the disk. Later on they will be moved to their proper location. Because the logging area is a small, contiguous region on the disk, there are no long distances for the disk heads to move, even during heavy operations, so these operations are quicker than synchronous updates. Additionally the complexity of the implementation is fairly limited, so the risk of bugs being present is low. A disadvantage is that all meta-data are written twice (once into the logging region and once to the proper location) so for normal work, a performance ***pessimization*** might result. On the other hand, in case of a crash, all pending meta-data operations can be quickly either rolled-back or completed from the logging area after the system comes up again, resulting in a fast filesystem startup.

1601 Kirk McKusick, the developer of Berkeley FFS, solved this problem with Soft Updates: all pending meta-data updates are kept in memory and written out to disk in a sorted sequence (***ordered meta-data updates***). This has the effect that, in case of heavy meta-data operations, later updates to an item ***catch*** the earlier ones if the earlier ones are still in memory and have not already been written to disk. So all operations on, say, a directory are generally performed in memory before the update is written to disk (the data blocks are sorted according to their position so that they will not be on the disk ahead of their meta-data). If the system crashes, this causes an implicit ***log rewind***: all operations which did not find their way to the disk appear as if they had never happened. A consistent filesystem state is maintained that appears to be the one of 30 to 60 seconds earlier. The algorithm used guarantees that all resources in use are marked as such in their appropriate bitmaps: blocks and inodes. After a crash, the only resource allocation error that occurs is that resources are marked as ***used*** which are actually ***free***. [fsck(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command#fsck&section8) recognizes this situation, and frees the resources that are no longer used. It is safe to ignore the dirty state of the filesystem after a crash by forcibly mounting it with `mount -f`. In order to free resources that may be unused, [fsck(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=fsck&section=8) needs to be run at a later time.

1605 The advantage is that meta-data operations are nearly as fast as asynchronous updates (i.e. faster than with ***logging***, which has to write the meta-data twice). The disadvantages are the complexity of the code (implying a higher risk for bugs in an area that is highly sensitive regarding loss of user data), and a higher memory consumption. Additionally there are some idiosyncrasies one has to get used to. After a crash, the state of the filesystem appears to be somewhat ***older***. In situations where the standard synchronous approach would have caused some zero-length files to remain after the `fsck`, these files do not exist at all with a Soft Updates filesystem because neither the meta-data nor the file contents have ever been written to disk. Disk space is not released until the updates have been written to disk, which may take place some time after running `rm`. This may cause problems when installing large amounts of data on a filesystem that does not have enough free space to hold all the files twice.

1625 `kern.maxfiles` can be raised or lowered based upon your system requirements. This variable indicates the maximum number of file descriptors on your system. When the file descriptor table is full, ***`file: table is full`*** will show up repeatedly in the system message buffer, which can be viewed with the `dmesg` command.

1629 Each open file, socket, or fifo uses one file descriptor. A large-scale production server may easily require many thousands of file descriptors, depending on the kind and number of services running concurrently.

1633 `kern.maxfile`'s default value is dictated by the `MAXUSERS` option in your kernel configuration file. `kern.maxfiles` grows proportionally to the value of `MAXUSERS`. When compiling a custom kernel, it is a good idea to set this kernel configuration option according to the uses of your system. From this number, the kernel is given most of its pre-defined limits. Even though a production machine may not actually have 256 users connected at once, the resources needed may be similar to a high-scale web server.

1637 **Note:** Setting `MAXUSERS` to `0` in your kernel configuration file will choose a reasonable default value based on the amount of RAM present in your system. It is set to 0 in the default GENERIC kernel.

1645 The `kern.ipc.somaxconn` sysctl variable limits the size of the listen queue for accepting new TCP connections. The default value of `128` is typically too low for robust handling of new connections in a heavily loaded web server environment. For such environments, it is recommended to increase this value to `1024` or higher. The service daemon may itself limit the listen queue size (e.g. [sendmail(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sendmail&section=8), or **Apache** ) but will often have a directive in its configuration file to adjust the queue size. Large listen queues also do a better job of avoiding Denial of Service (DoS) attacks.

1652 The `NMBCLUSTERS` kernel configuration option dictates the amount of network Mbufs available to the system. A heavily-trafficked server with a low number of Mbufs will hinder DragonFly's ability. Each cluster represents approximately 2 K of memory, so a value of 1024 represents 2 megabytes of kernel memory reserved for network buffers. A simple calculation can be done to figure out how many are needed. If you have a web server which maxes out at 1000 simultaneous connections, and each connection eats a 16 K receive and 16 K send buffer, you need approximately 32 MB worth of network buffers to cover the web server. A good rule of thumb is to multiply by 2, so 2x32 MB / 2 KB # 64 MB / 2 kB 32768. We recommend values between 4096 and 32768 for machines with greater amounts of memory. Under no circumstances should you specify an arbitrarily high value for this parameter as it could lead to a boot time crash. The `-m` option to [netstat(1)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=netstat&section=1) may be used to observe network cluster use. `kern.ipc.nmbclusters` loader tunable should be used to tune this at boot time.

1657 For busy servers that make extensive use of the [sendfile(2)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sendfile&section=2) system call, it may be necessary to increase the number of [sendfile(2)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sendfile&section=2) buffers via the `NSFBUFS` kernel configuration option or by setting its value in `/boot/loader.conf` (see [loader(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=loader&section=8) for details). A common indicator that this parameter needs to be adjusted is when processes are seen in the `sfbufa` state. The sysctl variable `kern.ipc.nsfbufs` is a read-only glimpse at the kernel configured variable. This parameter nominally scales with `kern.maxusers`, however it may be necessary to tune accordingly.

1661 **Important:** Even though a socket has been marked as non-blocking, calling [sendfile(2)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sendfile&section=2) on the non-blocking socket may result in the [sendfile(2)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=sendfile&section=2) call blocking until enough `struct sf_buf`'s are made available.

1669 The `net.inet.ip.portrange.*` sysctl variables control the port number ranges automatically bound to TCP and UDP sockets. There are three ranges: a low range, a default range, and a high range. Most network programs use the default range which is controlled by the `net.inet.ip.portrange.first` and `net.inet.ip.portrange.last`, which default to 1024 and 5000, respectively. Bound port ranges are used for outgoing connections, and it is possible to run the system out of ports under certain circumstances. This most commonly occurs when you are running a heavily loaded web proxy. The port range is not an issue when running servers which handle mainly incoming connections, such as a normal web server, or has a limited number of outgoing connections, such as a mail relay. For situations where you may run yourself out of ports, it is recommended to increase `net.inet.ip.portrange.last` modestly. A value of `10000`, `20000` or `30000` may be reasonable. You should also consider firewall effects when changing the port range. Some firewalls may block large ranges of ports (usually low-numbered ports) and expect systems to use higher ranges of ports for outgoing connections -- for this reason it is recommended that `net.inet.ip.portrange.first` be lowered.

1677 The TCP Bandwidth Delay Product Limiting is similar to TCP/Vegas in NetBSD. It can be enabled by setting `net.inet.tcp.inflight_enable` sysctl variable to `1`. The system will attempt to calculate the bandwidth delay product for each connection and limit the amount of data queued to the network to just the amount required to maintain optimum throughput.

1681 This feature is useful if you are serving data over modems, Gigabit Ethernet, or even high speed WAN links (or any other link with a high bandwidth delay product), especially if you are also using window scaling or have configured a large send window. If you enable this option, you should also be sure to set `net.inet.tcp.inflight_debug` to `0` (disable debugging), and for production use setting `net.inet.tcp.inflight_min` to at least `6144` may be beneficial. However, note that setting high minimums may effectively disable bandwidth limiting depending on the link. The limiting feature reduces the amount of data built up in intermediate route and switch packet queues as well as reduces the amount of data built up in the local host's interface queue. With fewer packets queued up, interactive connections, especially over slow modems, will also be able to operate with lower ***Round Trip Times***. However, note that this feature only effects data transmission (uploading / server side). It has no effect on data reception (downloading).

1685 Adjusting `net.inet.tcp.inflight_stab` is ***not*** recommended. This parameter defaults to 20, representing 2 maximal packets added to the bandwidth delay product window calculation. The additional window is required to stabilize the algorithm and improve responsiveness to changing conditions, but it can also result in higher ping times over slow links (though still much lower than you would get without the inflight algorithm). In such cases, you may wish to try reducing this parameter to 15, 10, or 5; and may also have to reduce `net.inet.tcp.inflight_min` (for example, to 3500) to get the desired effect. Reducing these parameters should be done as a last resort only.

1701 No matter how well you plan, sometimes a system does not run as you expect. If you find you need more swap space, it is simple enough to add. You have three ways to increase swap space: adding a new hard drive, enabling swap over NFS, and creating a swap file on an existing partition.

1709 The best way to add swap, of course, is to use this as an excuse to add another hard drive. You can always use another hard drive, after all. If you can do this, go reread the discussion about swap space in [configtuning-initial.html Section 6.2] for some suggestions on how to best arrange your swap.

1717 Swapping over NFS is only recommended if you do not have a local hard disk to swap to. Even though DragonFly has an excellent NFS implementation, NFS swapping will be limited by the available network bandwidth and puts an additional burden on the NFS server.

1792 It is very important to utilize hardware resources in an efficient manner. Before ACPI was introduced, it was very difficult and inflexible for operating systems to manage the power usage and thermal properties of a system. The hardware was controlled by some sort of BIOS embedded interface, such as ***Plug and Play BIOS (PNPBIOS)***, or ***Advanced Power Management (APM)*** and so on. Power and Resource Management is one of the key components of a modern operating system. For example, you may want an operating system to monitor system limits (and possibly alert you) in case your system temperature increased unexpectedly.

1796 In this section, we will provide comprehensive information about ACPI. References will be provided for further reading at the end. Please be aware that ACPI is available on DragonFly systems as a default kernel module.

1804 Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) is a standard written by an alliance of vendors to provide a standard interface for hardware resources and power management (hence the name). It is a key element in ***Operating System-directed configuration and Power Management***, i.e.: it provides more control and flexibility to the operating system (OS). Modern systems ***stretched*** the limits of the current Plug and Play interfaces (such as APM), prior to the introduction of ACPI. ACPI is the direct successor to APM (Advanced Power Management).

1812 The ***Advanced Power Management (APM)*** facility control's the power usage of a system based on its activity. The APM BIOS is supplied by the (system) vendor and it is specific to the hardware platform. An APM driver in the OS mediates access to the ***APM Software Interface***, which allows management of power levels.

1815 There are four major problems in APM. Firstly, power management is done by the (vendor-specific) BIOS, and the OS does not have any knowledge of it. One example of this, is when the user sets idle-time values for a hard drive in the APM BIOS, that when exceeded, it (BIOS) would spin down the hard drive, without the consent of the OS. Secondly, the APM logic is embedded in the BIOS, and it operates outside the scope of the OS. This means users can only fix problems in their APM BIOS by flashing a new one into the ROM; which, is a very dangerous procedure, and if it fails, it could leave the system in an unrecoverable state. Thirdly, APM is a vendor-specific technology, which, means that there is a lot or parity (duplication of efforts) and bugs found in one vendor's BIOS, may not be solved in others. Last but not the least, the APM BIOS did not have enough room to implement a sophisticated power policy, or one that can adapt very well to the purpose of the machine.

1830 The `acpi.ko` driver is loaded by default at start up by the [loader(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=loader&section=8) and should ***not*** be compiled into the kernel. The reasoning behind this is that modules are easier to work with, say if switching to another `acpi.ko` without doing a kernel rebuild. This has the advantage of making testing easier. Another reason is that starting ACPI after a system has been brought up is not too useful, and in some cases can be fatal. In doubt, just disable ACPI all together. This driver should not and can not be unloaded because the system bus uses it for various hardware interactions. ACPI can be disabled with the [acpiconf(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=acpiconf&section=8) utility. In fact most of the interaction with ACPI can be done via [acpiconf(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=acpiconf&section=8). Basically this means, if anything about ACPI is in the [dmesg(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=dmesg&section=8) output, then most likely it is already running.

1838 In the simplest form, ACPI can be used to put the system into a sleep mode with [acpiconf(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=acpiconf&section=8), the `-s` flag, and a `1-5` option. Most users will only need `1`. Option `5` will do a soft-off which is the same action as:

1855 ACPI is a fundamentally new way of discovering devices, managing power usage, and providing standardized access to various hardware previously managed by the BIOS. Progress is being made toward ACPI working on all systems, but bugs in some motherboards ***ACPI Machine Language*** (AML) bytecode, incompleteness in DragonFly's kernel subsystems, and bugs in the Intel ACPI-CA interpreter continue to appear.

1858 This document is intended to help you assist the DragonFly ACPI maintainers in identifying the root cause of problems you observe and debugging and developing a solution. Thanks for reading this and we hope we can solve your system's problems.

1868 * Description of the buggy behavior, including system type and model and anything that causes the bug to appear. Also, please note as accurately as possible when the bug began occurring if it is new for you.

1891 ACPI is present in all modern computers that conform to the ia32 (x86), ia64 (Itanium), and amd64 (AMD) architectures. The full standard has many features including CPU performance management, power planes control, thermal zones, various battery systems, embedded controllers, and bus enumeration. Most systems implement less than the full standard. For instance, a desktop system usually only implements the bus enumeration parts while a laptop might have cooling and battery management support as well. Laptops also have suspend and resume, with their own associated complexity.

1895 An ACPI-compliant system has various components. The BIOS and chipset vendors provide various fixed tables (e.g., FADT) in memory that specify things like the APIC map (used for SMP), config registers, and simple configuration values. Additionally, a table of bytecode (the ***Differentiated System Description Table*** DSDT) is provided that specifies a tree-like name space of devices and methods.

1899 The ACPI driver must parse the fixed tables, implement an interpreter for the bytecode, and modify device drivers and the kernel to accept information from the ACPI subsystem. For DragonFly, Intel has provided an interpreter (ACPI-CA) that is shared with Linux and NetBSD®. The path to the ACPI-CA source code is `src/sys/dev/acpica5`. Finally, drivers that implement various ACPI devices are found in `src/sys/dev/acpica5`.

1915 ACPI has three suspend to RAM (STR) states, `S1`-`S3`, and one suspend to disk state (`STD`), called `S4`. `S5` is ***soft off*** and is the normal state your system is in when plugged in but not powered up. `S4` can actually be implemented two separate ways. `S4`BIOS is a BIOS-assisted suspend to disk. `S4`OS is implemented entirely by the operating system.

1930 When testing suspend/resume, start with `S1`, if supported. This state is most likely to work since it doesn't require much driver support. No one has implemented `S2` but if you have it, it's similar to `S1`. The next thing to try is `S3`. This is the deepest STR state and requires a lot of driver support to properly reinitialize your hardware. If you have problems resuming, feel free to email the [bugs](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/mailarchive/) list but do not expect the problem to be resolved since there are a lot of drivers/hardware that need more testing and work.

1934 To help isolate the problem, remove as many drivers from your kernel as possible. If it works, you can narrow down which driver is the problem by loading drivers until it fails again. Typically binary drivers like `nvidia.ko`, **X11** display drivers, and USB will have the most problems while Ethernet interfaces usually work fine. If you can load/unload the drivers ok, you can automate this by putting the appropriate commands in `/etc/rc.suspend` and `/etc/rc.resume`. There is a commented-out example for unloading and loading a driver. Try setting `hw.acpi.reset_video` to zero (0) if your display is messed up after resume. Try setting longer or shorter values for `hw.acpi.sleep_delay` to see if that helps.

1938 Another thing to try is load a recent Linux distribution with ACPI support and test their suspend/resume support on the same hardware. If it works on Linux, it's likely a DragonFly driver problem and narrowing down which driver causes the problems will help us fix the problem. Note that the ACPI maintainers do not usually maintain other drivers (e.g sound, ATA, etc.) so any work done on tracking down a driver problem should probably eventually be posted to the [bugs](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/mailarchive/) list and mailed to the driver maintainer. If you are feeling adventurous, go ahead and start putting some debugging [printf(3)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command#printf&section3)s in a problematic driver to track down where in its resume function it hangs.

1940 Finally, try disabling ACPI and enabling APM instead. If suspend/resume works with APM, you may be better off sticking with APM, especially on older hardware (pre-2000). It took vendors a while to get ACPI support correct and older hardware is more likely to have BIOS problems with ACPI.

1947 Most system hangs are a result of lost interrupts or an interrupt storm. Chipsets have a lot of problems based on how the BIOS configures interrupts before boot, correctness of the APIC (MADT) table, and routing of the ***System Control Interrupt*** (SCI).

1949 Interrupt storms can be distinguished from lost interrupts by checking the output of `vmstat -i` and looking at the line that has `acpi0`. If the counter is increasing at more than a couple per second, you have an interrupt storm. If the system appears hung, try breaking to DDB ( **CTRL** + **ALT** + **ESC** on console) and type `show interrupts`.

1957 Panics are relatively rare for ACPI and are the top priority to be fixed. The first step is to isolate the steps to reproduce the panic (if possible) and get a backtrace. Follow the advice for enabling `options DDB` and setting up a serial console (see [ this section](serialconsole-setup.html#SERIALCONSOLE-DDB)) or setting up a [dump(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=dump&section=8) partition. You can get a backtrace in DDB with `tr`. If you have to handwrite the backtrace, be sure to at least get the lowest five (5) and top five (5) lines in the trace.

1959 Then, try to isolate the problem by booting with ACPI disabled. If that works, you can isolate the ACPI subsystem by using various values of `debug.acpi.disable`. See the [acpi(4)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=acpi&section=4) manual page for some examples.

1967 First, try setting `hw.acpi.disable_on_poweroff#0` in [loader.conf(5)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=loader.conf&section=5). This keeps ACPI from disabling various events during the shutdown process. Some systems need this value set to ***1*** (the default) for the same reason. This usually fixes the problem of a system powering up spontaneously after a suspend or poweroff.

1975 If you have other problems with ACPI (working with a docking station, devices not detected, etc.), please email a description to the mailing list as well; however, some of these issues may be related to unfinished parts of the ACPI subsystem so they might take a while to be implemented. Please be patient and prepared to test patches we may send you.

1997 Often, you can resolve these problems by updating your BIOS to the latest revision. Most console messages are harmless but if you have other problems like battery status not working, they're a good place to start looking for problems in the AML. The bytecode, known as AML, is compiled from a source language called ASL. The AML is found in the table known as the DSDT. To get a copy of your ASL, use [acpidump(8)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=acpidump&section=8). You should use both the `-t` (show contents of the fixed tables) and `-d` (disassemble AML to ASL) options. See the [submitting Debugging Information](acpi-debug.html#ACPI-SUBMITDEBUG) section for an example syntax.

2001 The simplest first check you can do is to recompile your ASL to check for errors. Warnings can usually be ignored but errors are bugs that will usually prevent ACPI from working correctly. To recompile your ASL, issue the following command:

2016 In the long run, our goal is for almost everyone to have ACPI work without any user intervention. At this point, however, we are still developing workarounds for common mistakes made by the BIOS vendors. The Microsoft interpreter (`acpi.sys` and `acpiec.sys`) does not strictly check for adherence to the standard, and thus many BIOS vendors who only test ACPI under Windows never fix their ASL. We hope to continue to identify and document exactly what non-standard behavior is allowed by Microsoft's interpreter and replicate it so DragonFly can work without forcing users to fix the ASL. As a workaround and to help us identify behavior, you can fix the ASL manually. If this works for you, please send a [diff(1)](http://leaf.dragonflybsd.org/cgi/web-man?command=diff&section=1) of the old and new ASL so we can possibly work around the buggy behavior in ACPI-CA and thus make your fix unnecessary.

2025 Some AML assumes the world consists of various Windows versions. You can tell DragonFly to claim it is any OS to see if this fixes problems you may have. An easy way to override this is to set `hw.acpi.osname=Windows 2001` in `/boot/loader.conf` or other similar strings you find in the ASL.

2033 Some methods do not explicitly return a value as the standard requires. While ACPI-CA does not handle this, DragonFly has a workaround that allows it to return the value implicitly. You can also add explicit Return statements where required if you know what value should be returned. To force `iasl` to compile the ASL, use the `-f` flag.

2050 You can add the `-f` flag to force creation of the AML, even if there are errors during compilation. Remember that some errors (e.g., missing Return statements) are automatically worked around by the interpreter.

2075 The ACPI driver has a very flexible debugging facility. It allows you to specify a set of subsystems as well as the level of verbosity. The subsystems you wish to debug are specified as ***layers*** and are broken down into ACPI-CA components (ACPI_ALL_COMPONENTS) and ACPI hardware support (ACPI_ALL_DRIVERS). The verbosity of debugging output is specified as the ***level*** and ranges from ACPI_LV_ERROR (just report errors) to ACPI_LV_VERBOSE (everything). The ***level*** is a bitmask so multiple options can be set at once, separated by spaces. In practice, you will want to use a serial console to log the output if it is so long it flushes the console message buffer.

2079 Debugging output is not enabled by default. To enable it, add `options ACPI_DEBUG` to your kernel config if ACPI is compiled into the kernel. You can add `ACPI_DEBUG=1` to your `/etc/make.conf` to enable it globally. If it is a module, you can recompile just your `acpi.ko` module as follows:

2105 If the information you want is triggered by a specific event (say, a suspend and then resume), you can leave out changes to `loader.conf` and instead use `sysctl` to specify the layer and level after booting and preparing your system for the specific event. The `sysctl`s are named the same as the tunables in `loader.conf`.